The Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive Hosts NYC Cli­mate Tech­nol­o­gy Showcase

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NYCEDC President & CEO Andrew Kimball, Trust for Governors Island President and CEO Clare Newman, and Lindsay Greene, President and CEO, Brooklyn Navy Yard Development Corporation.

On Mon­day, Novem­ber 18, 2024, the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island (TGI), New York City Eco­nom­ic Devel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion (NYCEDC), and Brook­lyn Navy Yard Devel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion (BNY­DC) held a Cli­mate Tech­nol­o­gy Show­case. Togeth­er, the three mis­sion-aligned pub­lic enti­ties with sites along the New York Har­bor, and con­nect­ed by NYC Fer­ry, are com­mit­ted to mak­ing New York City the glob­al cap­i­tal of cli­mate inno­va­tion through pilot­ing pro­grams, leas­es, work­force devel­op­ment invest­ments, and reg­u­la­to­ry wayfind­ing. The Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive (HCC) is pledg­ing to dou­ble the num­ber of pilots con­duct­ed across the col­lab­o­ra­tive and struc­ture the pro­gram so that com­pa­nies ben­e­fit from both cam­pus-spe­cif­ic expe­ri­ences and col­lab­o­ra­tive-wide net­works, and fund­ing opportunities.

The NYC Cli­mate Tech­nol­o­gy Show­case high­lights the col­lec­tive impact of pilot­ing across the HCC while also pro­vid­ing addi­tion­al oppor­tu­ni­ties for par­tic­i­pat­ing com­pa­nies to grow and scale their busi­ness­es in New York City and increase expo­sure to prospec­tive cus­tomers, both gov­ern­men­tal and in the pri­vate sec­tor. Over 40 star­tups par­tic­i­pat­ed, and the event fea­tured demon­stra­tions of inno­v­a­tive cli­mate tech­nol­o­gy from six dif­fer­ent companies.

New York City’s ded­i­ca­tion to grow­ing the green econ­o­my is stronger than ever and the role of cities as engines of inno­va­tion has nev­er been more impor­tant than in the urgent work to com­bat cli­mate change,” said First Deputy May­or Maria Tor­res-Springer. The city’s com­mit­ment and cre­ativ­i­ty are exem­pli­fied by the Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive, a part­ner­ship between the Brook­lyn Navy Yard Devel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion, Trust for Gov­er­nors Island, and the New York City Eco­nom­ic Devel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion that deploys city-con­trolled cam­pus­es in the defin­ing fight of our time and helps build a vibrant cli­mate tech ecosys­tem in the city of New York.”

Today’s show­case, high­light­ing more than 40 part­ners from across the Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive, demon­strates what’s pos­si­ble when inno­va­tors are giv­en the space and resources need­ed to grow,” said Clare New­man, Pres­i­dent and CEO of the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. Through the city’s ecosys­tem of pilot­ing sites, includ­ing Gov­er­nors Island, we’ve been able to accel­er­ate real-world test­ing, help­ing to pro­pel these com­pa­nies into their next stages of devel­op­ment and giv­ing New York­ers a front-row seat to the tools to fight cli­mate change.”

The Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive is a unique col­lab­o­ra­tion of three mas­sive for­mer mil­i­tary bases that are being trans­formed to fight cli­mate change, the glob­al threat of our time,” said NYCEDC Pres­i­dent & CEO Andrew Kim­ball. Today’s show­case high­lights some of the amaz­ing entre­pre­neurs and tech­nol­o­gy already being pilot­ed at our three sites to unlock eco­nom­ic growth, cre­ate jobs, and pave the way for a green­er, more resilient future.”

Since the launch of the Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive ear­li­er this year, we’ve made tremen­dous progress towards our com­mit­ment of mak­ing New York City the epi­cen­ter of cli­mate tech R&D, and pro­duc­tion,” said Lind­say Greene, Pres­i­dent and CEO, Brook­lyn Navy Yard Devel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion. From fur­ther­ing EV solu­tions in urban envi­ron­ments to test­ing marine-based car­bon cap­ture in one of the busiest har­bors in the world, we’ve suc­cess­ful­ly lever­aged our water­front assets to iden­ti­fy and advance the solu­tions we will need to com­bat cli­mate change. We look for­ward to dou­bling down on this crit­i­cal work next year.”

The HCC will be an engine of eco­nom­ic oppor­tu­ni­ty for New York­ers that inte­grates edu­ca­tion, train­ing and career place­ment for 2100 New York­ers and will help posi­tion the city’s diverse tal­ent for green col­lar jobs that are crit­i­cal to grow­ing the green econ­o­my,” said Abby Jo Sigal, Exec­u­tive Direc­tor of the NYC Mayor’s Office of Tal­ent and Work­force Devel­op­ment. The city’s green econ­o­my will cre­ate 400,000 jobs, includ­ing 12,000 appren­tice­ships by 2040, and the crit­i­cal role that the HCC will play in con­nect­ing local tal­ent to these oppor­tu­ni­ties will make our econ­o­my more inclu­sive, resilient, and green.”

New York City is where the world’s bright­est minds come to test and exe­cute their best ideas on the biggest stage,” said New York City Chief Tech­nol­o­gy Offi­cer Matthew Fras­er. Today’s event demon­strates this admin­is­tra­tion’s com­mit­ment to col­lab­o­rate across sec­tors, indus­tries, and bor­ders to build a glob­al hub for urban inno­va­tion. Our efforts to stream­line and accel­er­ate the pilot­ing process for emerg­ing tech­nolo­gies, through ini­tia­tives such as the NYC Smart City Test­bed Pro­gram, allow us to bet­ter eval­u­ate and poten­tial­ly scale solu­tions to our most press­ing chal­lenges — a win for tech com­pa­nies, city gov­ern­ment, and, most impor­tant­ly, 8.3 mil­lion New York­ers. I thank the mem­bers of the Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive for their part­ner­ship in this impor­tant work.”

The Adams Admin­is­tra­tion has com­mit­ted to mak­ing New York City a glob­al hub of urban inno­va­tion – one of the 40 ini­tia­tives laid out in the New” New York Action Plan. Fol­low­ing this com­mit­ment, the NYCEDC part­nered with the Cor­nell Tech’s Jacobs Urban Tech Hub to release Pilot:New York City as a road map to accel­er­ate urban inno­va­tion in New York City. The for­ma­tion of the HCC builds on May­or Adams’ efforts to devel­op a Har­bor of the Future,” a mul­ti­fac­eted ini­tia­tive, and the Green Econ­o­my Action Plan” — both announced by May­or Adams in his 2024 State of the City address to reimag­ine New York City’s water­front and fuel 21st-cen­tu­ry growth and innovation.

As the core of New York City’s bur­geon­ing cli­mate inno­va­tion ecosys­tem, the HCC will invest over $725 mil­lion to advance New York’s green econ­o­my in NYCEDC’s Sun­set Park Dis­trict, the Brook­lyn Navy Yard, and on Gov­er­nors Island. The invest­ments sup­port cli­mate inno­va­tors through pilot­ing, ten­ant­i­ng, reg­u­la­to­ry coor­di­na­tion, work­force devel­op­ment, knowledge/​data shar­ing, fundrais­ing, and facil­i­tat­ing access to City agen­cies. The HCC, launched from the Adams’ Admin­is­tra­tion Green Econ­o­my Action Plan, unlocks six mil­lion square feet of space, will sup­port the cre­ation of 5,000 jobs, edu­cate and train 2,100 stu­dents, and gen­er­ate $55 bil­lion of eco­nom­ic impact.

Through­out the last year, the HCC has gath­ered crit­i­cal insights into the col­lec­tive impact of pilot­ing across our dif­fer­ent cam­pus­es. Between 2023 – 2024, 19 green econ­o­my founders and cli­mate tech com­pa­nies com­plet­ed or had an active pilot at one or more of the HCC pilot sites, includ­ing TGI’s Cli­mate Solu­tions Chal­lenge, NYCEDC’s Pilots at BAT pro­gram, and BNY­D­C’s Yard Labs.

Insights from the last year show that cli­mate tech­nolo­gies come from all over the world with com­pa­nies cut­ting across a range of green econ­o­my indus­tries, includ­ing resilience infra­struc­ture, build­ings, trans­porta­tion, and ener­gy. Com­pa­nies come to New York City to pilot at var­i­ous devel­op­ment stages but tend to be in the deploy­ment stage. Through pilot­ing their tech­nolo­gies along the East Riv­er water­front, the indus­tri­al envi­ron­ment of all three HCC sites, com­pa­nies have been able to:

  • Col­lect data that helps com­pa­nies iter­ate and improve their product;
  • Demon­strate com­mer­cial viability;
  • Raise expo­sure of their cli­mate tech­nolo­gies to both the investors and the public;
  • Gain entry into the New York City mar­ket and tai­lor ser­vices to New York;
  • Secure indus­try cer­ti­fi­ca­tions, dur­ing the pilot phase or plan to get their cer­ti­fi­ca­tion upon com­plet­ing their pilot;
  • Expand their foot­print in New York City, includ­ing mak­ing new con­nec­tions with city agen­cies, expand­ing to new office, lab or fac­to­ry space, and cre­at­ing new investor con­nec­tions; and
  • Onboard­ed new interns, trainees, full or part time staff, cre­at­ing an aver­age of four new jobs per pilot project.

This pilot serves as a proof-of-con­cept demon­stra­tion and has accel­er­at­ed our growth in NYC, LA, and Detroit. This project has helped us gen­er­ate rev­enue, col­lect real-world data, part­ner with more than 20 cus­tomers to help move their goods, and raise $100k in grant fund­ing to bring our 100% elec­tric freight mobil­i­ty solu­tions to oth­er cities across the US,” said Emis­sion­less Founder Max Yer­gan.

Both pilots have accel­er­at­ed our prod­uct devel­op­ment to val­i­date how our sys­tem can be installed in build­ings and how it can be iter­at­ed to meet real-world con­straints. Fol­low­ing our pilot at Gov­er­nors Island, we received mul­ti­ple inquiries from cus­tomers inter­est­ed in com­mer­cial­ly test­ing our sys­tem at their facil­i­ties. These pilot oppor­tu­ni­ties like­ly brought down our go-to-mar­ket time­line from 24 months to at least six months,” said LÆRO Design Stu­dio Founder & CEO Noe­mi Flo­rea.

Matcha’s pilot at the Brook­lyn Army Ter­mi­nal was an accel­er­ant to our entry into New York. The pilot helped Matcha demon­strate the reli­a­bil­i­ty of its EV charg­ing soft­ware, gain approval from NYSER­DA, and gen­er­ate press,” said Matcha Co-founder and CEO Chris Klue­sen­er.

Beyond real sav­ings data cap­tured, the pilot helped us fig­ure out ways to improve our soft­ware in a real pro­duc­tion envi­ron­ment. For exam­ple, when the pilot site had a black­out event dur­ing a pow­er surge in the grid, 7 of 25 of our smart plugs could not recon­nect to Wi-Fi. We have since devel­oped a more robust IoT pro­to­col to over­come this sit­u­a­tion. With these issues iden­ti­fied and resolved at a small scale, we then gain the con­fi­dence and abil­i­ty to install at a larg­er scale (>50 out­lets per account). This is why the pilot is very impor­tant to us — to val­i­date our con­cept with real data and find loop­holes in our prod­uct to improve,” said Revert Tech­nolo­gies Co-founder and CEO Ryan Li.

This pilot with DOT and NYCEDC has giv­en us the oppor­tu­ni­ty to refine our prod­uct and ser­vice offer­ing for NYC’s deliv­ery work­ers, ensur­ing that it is built with their spe­cif­ic needs in mind. DOT and NYCEDC cleared the way for us to be able to build safe charg­ing infra­struc­ture for NYC’s streets, and we look for­ward to con­tin­u­ing to work togeth­er,” said Swobbee US Man­ag­ing Direc­tor Stephan von Wolff.

Our pilot at TGI has been instru­men­tal in our com­pa­ny’s suc­cess, gen­er­at­ing crit­i­cal data to iter­ate and improve our prod­uct inter­nal­ly, while show­ing exter­nal­ly that our prod­uct works and what its ben­e­fits are to secure new cus­tomers, investors, com­mu­ni­ty part­ners, and tal­ent. Our new pilot at BNY has allowed us to scale up our car­bon diox­ide removal and stor­age process sev­er­al orders of mag­ni­tude, with us now deliv­er­ing on the off­sets we’ve sold, and demon­strat­ing that our process is safe and effec­tive at a mean­ing­ful scale,” said Vycarb Founder & CEO Gar­rett Boudinot.

The May­or Adams Administration’s Har­bor of the Future ini­tia­tive includes emerg­ing inno­va­tion cen­ters at the Hunts Point Pro­duce Mar­ket, Gov­er­nors Island, the Brook­lyn Navy Yard, the Sci­ence Park and Research Cam­pus in Kips Bay, and the North Shore of Stat­en Island. Most recent­ly, May­or Adams announced that the city will invest $100 mil­lion to cre­ate the Cli­mate Inno­va­tion Hub” at the Brook­lyn Army Ter­mi­nal as a part of the city’s Green Econ­o­my Action Plan that will posi­tion New York­ers to ben­e­fit from near­ly 400,000 green-col­lar” jobs by 2040. This new hub will serve as a home for clean tech inno­va­tion, man­u­fac­tur­ing and sup­port green tech­nol­o­gy star­tups — includ­ing sup­port­ing the Pilots at BAT program.

About The Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive
As out­lined in the Green Econ­o­my Action Plan, released by May­or Eric Adams in Feb­ru­ary of 2024, the plan’s vision is to estab­lish New York City as the glob­al cap­i­tal of cli­mate inno­va­tion through pilot­ing pro­grams, leas­es for office and lab space, work­force devel­op­ment invest­ments, and reg­u­la­to­ry wayfind­ing. At the heart of New York City’s bur­geon­ing cli­mate inno­va­tion ecosys­tem, The Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive will invest over $725 mil­lion to advance New York’s green econ­o­my in NYCEDC’s Sun­set Park dis­trict, the Brook­lyn Navy Yard, and on Gov­er­nors Island. By unlock­ing six mil­lion square feet of space, the Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive will sup­port the cre­ation of 5,000 per­ma­nent jobs, edu­cate and train 2,100 stu­dents, and gen­er­ate $55 bil­lion in eco­nom­ic impact.

Adams Admin­is­tra­tion Breaks Ground on New York Har­bor School Expan­sion on Gov­er­nors Island

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L to R: Harbor School Principal Michael Hojnacki, Trust for Governors Island President and CEO Clare Newman, New York City School Construction Authority (SCA) President and CEO Nina Kubota, Council Member Christopher Marte, and Executive Director Of Mayor's Office Of Climate And Environmental Justice Elijah Hutchinson at the groundbreaking.

New York City May­or Eric Adams, New York City School Con­struc­tion Author­i­ty (SCA) Pres­i­dent and CEO Nina Kub­o­ta, New York City Pub­lic Schools Chan­cel­lor Melis­sa Aviles-Ramos, and Trust for Gov­er­nors Island Pres­i­dent and CEO Clare New­man broke ground on a major expan­sion of the Urban Assem­bly New York Har­bor School on Gov­er­nors Island on Novem­ber 7, 2024. The expan­sion will allow the school to bet­ter pre­pare young New York­ers for good-pay­ing green jobs by dou­bling the school’s cam­pus from two to four build­ings and adding new class­rooms, a com­pe­ti­tion-sized pool and gym­na­si­um, and lab­o­ra­to­ries designed to sup­port the school’s dis­tinc­tive mar­itime and envi­ron­men­tal cur­ricu­lum. The announce­ment builds on May­or Adams’ efforts to devel­op a Har­bor of the Future” – a mul­ti­fac­eted ini­tia­tive announced by May­or Adams in his State of the City this year to reimag­ine New York City’s water­front to fuel 21st-cen­tu­ry growth and innovation.

We’re laser-focused on prepar­ing young New York­ers for good-pay­ing jobs of the future, and this his­toric expan­sion of the Har­bor School will allow us to do just that,” said May­or Adams. The addi­tion­al class­room and train­ing space will help us ensure that our kids ben­e­fit from the 400,000 green jobs our city will host by 2040. Har­bor School grad­u­ates will work on the wind tur­bines that will pow­er 500,000 homes in our city, invent green tech­nolo­gies that we can’t even imag­ine yet, and more.”

From the New York Cli­mate Exchange to the expan­sion of the Har­bor School, Gov­er­nors Island is proof of New York City’s lead­er­ship in cli­mate tech­nol­o­gy and edu­ca­tion,” said First Deputy May­or Maria Tor­res-Springer. The Har­bor School’s new facil­i­ties – and Gov­er­nors Island more broad­ly – con­tin­ue to show­case how edu­ca­tion, research, and indus­tri­al devel­op­ment func­tion togeth­er to bring good jobs to the five bor­oughs for the expand­ing cli­mate tech industry.”

We say kids are inter­net natives’ – smarter and bet­ter versed than the rest of us on the way mod­ern tech­nol­o­gy works,” said Deputy May­or for Oper­a­tions Meera Joshi. Well, they’re going to be cli­mate change natives’ too – bet­ter pre­pared than any gen­er­a­tion pri­or to take on the real­i­ties and chal­lenges of cli­mate change with the urgency it requires. That is in part thanks to inno­v­a­tive part­ner­ships like the Har­bor School, which will soon accom­mo­date more kids to learn in nature’s class­room. Thanks to the School Con­struc­tion Author­i­ty, the Trust For Gov­er­nors Island, and all our part­ners for mak­ing a high-qual­i­ty edu­ca­tion cen­ter­ing this vital life skill a reality.”

The expan­sion of the Urban Assem­bly New York Har­bor School rep­re­sents a bold step for­ward in our mis­sion to pro­vide stu­dents with unique, hands-on edu­ca­tion­al expe­ri­ences that pre­pare them for suc­cess­ful futures,” said New York City Pub­lic Schools Chan­cel­lor Melis­sa Aviles-Ramos. By dou­bling the cam­pus size and enhanc­ing the school’s facil­i­ties, we are not only enrich­ing the aca­d­e­m­ic jour­ney but also fos­ter­ing the next gen­er­a­tion of envi­ron­men­tal lead­ers and mar­itime experts right here in New York City.”

We’re proud to improve and build on the orig­i­nal vision for the Urban Assem­bly New York Har­bor School and look for­ward to see­ing how the expand­ed cam­pus will empow­er these excep­tion­al stu­dents to learn and expand their envi­ron­men­tal stew­ard­ship,” said SCA Pres­i­dent and CEO Kub­o­ta. Thanks to a strong col­lab­o­ra­tion between the SCA, New York City Pub­lic Schools, and the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island, this expan­sion will enable the school to serve even more stu­dents while becom­ing a valu­able resource for the broad­er community.”

The Har­bor School is one of the gems of New York City, pro­vid­ing top notch edu­ca­tion and prepar­ing our next gen­er­a­tion of New York­ers in impor­tant indus­tries like mar­itime and the green econ­o­my,” said New York City Eco­nom­ic Devel­op­ment Cor­po­ra­tion Pres­i­dent and CEO Andrew Kim­ball. This expand­ed cam­pus will build on the ongo­ing suc­cess of the Har­bor School, and we look for­ward to these young peo­ple join­ing the work­force that will pow­er our Har­bor of the Future’ and careers across the five boroughs.”

Today marks a tru­ly excit­ing moment in New York City’s growth as a leader in cli­mate solu­tions – over the past 14 years, thou­sands of young New York­ers have had trans­for­ma­tion­al edu­ca­tion­al expe­ri­ences on Gov­er­nors Island, using the Har­bor as a liv­ing class­room and receiv­ing high-qual­i­ty career train­ing in mar­itime and envi­ron­men­tal fields,” said Trust for Gov­er­nors Island Pres­i­dent and CEO Clare New­man. We are proud to col­lab­o­rate with our part­ners at the School Con­struc­tion Author­i­ty and New York City Pub­lic Schools to devel­op these new, state-of-the-art facil­i­ties, which will serve to expand oppor­tu­ni­ties for stu­dents and empow­er the envi­ron­men­tal lead­ers of tomorrow.”

The Har­bor School pro­vides a col­lege prepara­to­ry edu­ca­tion built upon New York City’s mar­itime expe­ri­ence with a focus on envi­ron­men­tal stew­ard­ship. With its part­ners – includ­ing the Bil­lion Oys­ter Project – the school devel­ops authen­tic activ­i­ties for its stu­dents on, around, and relat­ed to the water that cre­ates a sense of respon­si­bil­i­ty to New York Har­bor and devel­op a new gen­er­a­tion of mar­itime advo­cates, enthu­si­asts, work­ers, and deci­sion-mak­ers. The expan­sion includes the con­struc­tion of a new, state-of-the-art facil­i­ty that will fea­ture a pool, gym­na­si­um, and addi­tion­al lab space ded­i­cat­ed to career-tech­ni­cal train­ing and research. The SCA will also ren­o­vate Build­ing 555 – a des­ig­nat­ed land­mark struc­ture built in 1938 – to cre­ate 32,000 square feet of addi­tion­al class­room space. Togeth­er, these projects will expand the school’s facil­i­ties from two to four build­ings and add 445 new seats, sup­port­ed by fund­ing from the New York City Coun­cil and the Man­hat­tan Bor­ough Pres­i­den­t’s Office.

Today’s announce­ment builds on the Adams admin­is­tra­tion’s ongo­ing efforts to devel­op New York Har­bor as the heart of the city’s green econ­o­my. In April 2023, May­or Adams and the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island unveiled the New York Cli­mate Exchange, a trans­for­ma­tive vision for a first-in-the-nation cli­mate research, edu­ca­tion, and jobs hub on Gov­er­nors Island that will cre­ate thou­sands of per­ma­nent jobs and $1 bil­lion in eco­nom­ic impact for the city. A cross-sec­tor con­sor­tium led by Stony Brook Uni­ver­si­ty, the Exchange will cre­ate a state-of-the-art, $700-mil­lion, 400,000-square-foot cam­pus ded­i­cat­ed to research­ing and devel­op­ing inno­v­a­tive cli­mate solu­tions that will be scaled across New York City and the world and that will equip New York­ers to hold the green jobs of the future. Open­ing in 2028, the New York Cli­mate Exchange will be ded­i­cat­ed to edu­ca­tion­al pro­gram­ming, research, cli­mate tech incu­ba­tion, and pol­i­cy work aimed at advanc­ing cli­mate action in New York City and else­where around the world.

Addi­tion­al­ly, in Feb­ru­ary 2024, May­or Adams announced an up to $100 mil­lion invest­ment in the Cli­mate Inno­va­tion Hub at Brook­lyn Army Ter­mi­nal, part of the admin­is­tra­tion’s Green Econ­o­my Action Plan designed to help New York City host near­ly 400,000 green jobs by 2040. This new space will accel­er­ate com­mer­cial­iza­tion path­ways for cli­mate tech star­tups and oth­er green econ­o­my busi­ness­es. It will serve 150 star­tups over 10 years – gen­er­at­ing $2.6 bil­lion in eco­nom­ic impact and cre­at­ing 600 jobs – while pro­vid­ing local work­force train­ing and job place­ment, par­tic­u­lar­ly for the local Sun­set Park community.

Fur­ther­more, in June 2024, May­or Adams broke ground on what will be the nation’s largest ded­i­cat­ed off­shore wind port at the South Brook­lyn Marine Ter­mi­nal in Sun­set Park, Brook­lyn. The project will accel­er­ate the clean ener­gy tran­si­tion, make New York City syn­ony­mous with off­shore wind, advance progress toward the state’s Cli­mate Lead­er­ship and Com­mu­ni­ty Pro­tec­tion Act goal to devel­op 9,000 megawatts of off­shore wind by 2035, and cre­ate a new indus­try with thou­sands of green-col­lar’ jobs on site and in the sup­ply chain. 

The Har­bor School is a resource as unique and spe­cial as Gov­er­nors Island itself,” said New York State Sen­a­tor Andrew Gounardes. This new expan­sion gives stu­dents even more oppor­tu­ni­ties to learn, play sports, and study our city’s nat­ur­al ecosys­tems in a one-of-kind envi­ron­ment. I’m glad to see oppor­tu­ni­ties for young peo­ple grow on Gov­er­nors Island, and I’m grate­ful to May­or Adams and the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island for mak­ing this possible.”

We are com­mit­ted to open­ing all career paths for our chil­dren, and our his­toric expan­sion of the New York Har­bor School will give us a new arse­nal of tools to pre­pare them for good-pay­ing mar­itime careers,” said New York State Assem­bly­mem­ber Jenifer Rajku­mar. New class space, lab­o­ra­to­ries, and oth­er facil­i­ties will allow stu­dents to immerse them­selves in this unique and excit­ing field. The expan­sion is part of our Har­bor of the Future’ plan, which will trans­form our water­front into a mod­ern hub of eco­nom­ic growth and inno­va­tion, gen­er­at­ing $95 bil­lion in eco­nom­ic activ­i­ty. We are chart­ing a course to sus­tain­able, inno­v­a­tive water­ways address­ing the needs of New Yorkers.”

Announc­ing the 2025 Cli­mate Solu­tions Challenge

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The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island offers unique oppor­tu­ni­ties for inno­va­tors to test ear­ly-stage cli­mate prod­ucts and ser­vices in a real-world envi­ron­ment. Select­ed pilot­ing projects uti­lize Gov­er­nors Island’s built, social, and nat­ur­al envi­ron­ments – includ­ing a 2.2‑mile water­front, 43-acre cli­mate resilient park, 7 miles of car-free streets, and 50+ his­toric build­ings – to accel­er­ate cli­mate inno­va­tion, eco­nom­ic oppor­tu­ni­ty, and social impact in diverse urban communities.

2025 Chal­lenge Theme: Cir­cu­lar Economy

Prob­lem:

New York­ers pro­duce near­ly 4 mil­lion tons of res­i­den­tial waste and anoth­er 4 mil­lion tons of com­mer­cial waste every year. More than half of New York City’s sol­id waste con­sists of con­struc­tion and demo­li­tion mate­ri­als. Today, NYC diverts about 20 per­cent of sol­id waste from land­fills and has com­mit­ted to send zero waste to land­fills by 2030. This waste stream dri­ves green­house gas emis­sions across its life cycle, from the extrac­tion of raw mate­ri­als to its trans­porta­tion and dis­pos­al. Waste trans­fer sta­tions in many cities are in locat­ed in envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice com­mu­ni­ties, con­tribut­ing to long­stand­ing air pol­lu­tion. Shift­ing to a cir­cu­lar econ­o­my that reuses, refur­bish­es, and recov­ers all kinds of mate­ri­als, reduces waste truck­ing, and min­i­mizes land­fill waste and embod­ied car­bon is key to achiev­ing an equi­table, net-zero city.

Chal­lenge:

How can cir­cu­lar econ­o­my prod­ucts and solu­tions dri­ve down the cli­mate impact of the urban waste stream and extend resource recov­ery to our busi­ness­es and neighborhoods?

Inno­va­tion Tracks:
  • Low-car­bon and cir­cu­lar con­struc­tion prod­ucts, includ­ing healthy materials.
  • Prod­ucts using resources that are recov­ered from the urban waste stream.
  • Prod­ucts and ser­vices that reduce con­struc­tion and demo­li­tion waste by extend­ing the use­ful life of exist­ing sys­tems and mak­ing more effi­cient use of new materials.
  • Mea­sure­ment tools and ser­vices that accel­er­ate diver­sion from land­fill and reduce sol­id waste.

To learn more and apply by the Decem­ber 5, 2024, dead­line, vis­it gov​is​land​.org/​c​h​a​l​lenge.

Open Call: 2025 Ice Sculp­ture Show

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2024 Artist Akira Yoshimura, photo by Julienne Schaer

New York City-based artists and col­lec­tives (of up to four peo­ple) are invit­ed to sub­mit ideas for an ice sculp­ture, to be com­plet­ed at the fourth annu­al Gov­er­nors Island Ice Sculp­ture Show, pre­sent­ed by Gov­er­nors Island Arts on Sat­ur­day, Feb­ru­ary 8, 2025. The theme of this year’s com­pe­ti­tion is Gov­er­nors Island + Nature. Appli­cants are encour­aged to think out­side the box and share with us a cre­ative inter­pre­ta­tion of this theme.

Ten pro­pos­als will be select­ed to par­tic­i­pate in the live carv­ing event. Select­ed appli­cants or teams will receive an award of $2,000 to par­tic­i­pate, and will be pro­vid­ed with tools, pro­duc­tion mate­ri­als, and will be matched with a pro­fes­sion­al ice carv­er to com­plete the work on the day of the event. The dead­line to sub­mit pro­pos­als is Sun­day, Novem­ber 172024.

Click here to learn more and apply by Novem­ber 172024.

Impor­tant Dates

  • Dead­line to apply: Sun­day, Novem­ber 17, 2024 at 11:59pm
  • Select­ed appli­cants to be noti­fied: Mon­day, Novem­ber 25, 2024. Note: Select­ed appli­cants must accept invi­ta­tion to par­tic­i­pate by Wednes­day, Novem­ber 272024
  • In-per­son ori­en­ta­tion: Date TBD. Appli­cants should plan to be avail­able on week­days between Feb­ru­ary 3 – 72025
  • Event date: Sat­ur­day, Feb­ru­ary 8, 2025 (Rain Date: Sun­day, Feb­ru­ary 92025)

Appli­cant & Project Eligibility

  • Artists of all back­grounds and dis­ci­plines are encour­aged to pro­pose a design for an ice sculpture.
  • Appli­cants will need to be com­fort­able and able to oper­ate pow­er tools (with instruc­tion) and lift ice and heavy objects dur­ing the event. Appli­cants will be under the coun­cil of a pro­fes­sion­al ice sculptor.
  • Appli­cants can sub­mit inde­pen­dent­ly or work as a team. Each select­ed work will receive a sin­gle award of $2,000.
  • Appli­cants need to be avail­able for an in-per­son ori­en­ta­tion week­day between Feb­ru­ary 3 – 72025
  • Appli­cants should pro­pose a work based on the use of a clear ice block sized approx­i­mate­ly 40” x 20” x 9”. Please make sure to detail dimen­sions when sub­mit­ting any sketch­es or renderings
  • The work does not need to remain in block dimen­sions. It will be con­struct­ed with ice carv­ing tools allow­ing it to be cut, remold­ed, and shaped to vary­ing dimensions.
  • Please note that any addi­tion­al mate­ri­als required for the pro­posed design, not out­lined above, should be sup­plied by the artist.

Pub­lic Event & Selection

  • Sculp­tures will be carved in a two-hour pub­lic event on Gov­er­nors Island, from 12pm – 2pm on Sat­ur­day, Feb­ru­ary 8, 2025 (Rain date on Sun­day, Feb­ru­ary 92025).
  • Ten projects will be select­ed noti­fied by Mon­day, Novem­ber 25, 2024. Select­ed appli­cants will need to accept invi­ta­tions by Wednes­day, Novem­ber 272025
  • Win­ning sub­mis­sions will be announced and pub­lished online by Jan­u­ary 2025.
  • Appli­cants will be required to be on site on Gov­er­nors Island start­ing at 10am on the day of the show (Sat­ur­day, Feb­ru­ary 8, 2025. Rain date on Sun­day, Feb­ru­ary 92025).
  • The carved sculp­tures will remain on view on Gov­er­nors Island until they melt.

Announc­ing the Gov­er­nors Island Foundation

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We are thrilled to share an excit­ing update: effec­tive Novem­ber 1, 2024, the Friends of Gov­er­nors Island will become the Gov­er­nors Island Foun­da­tion.

For over two decades, the Friends of Gov­er­nors Island (for­mer­ly Gov­er­nors Island Alliance) has been instru­men­tal in advo­cat­ing for and nur­tur­ing the Island’s growth as a cher­ished pub­lic des­ti­na­tion for New York­ers. As we con­tin­ue to ful­fill our mis­sion and work towards real­iz­ing the Island’s full poten­tial, we have set ambi­tious goals to enhance our park, expand our arts and cul­ture pro­grams, estab­lish a pre­mier cen­ter for research and edu­ca­tion on cli­mate change, and advance projects that boost vis­i­tor ameni­ties and his­toric preser­va­tion.

As the ded­i­cat­ed fundrais­ing part­ner to the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island, the Gov­er­nors Island Foun­da­tion will sup­port these goals by focus­ing on secur­ing phil­an­thropic sup­port to fur­ther strength­en the Island as a vibrant resource for all New York­ers. Under this new struc­ture, the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island and Gov­er­nors Island Foun­da­tion will work more close­ly than ever to sus­tain our mis­sion and programs.

We are enthu­si­as­tic about this new chap­ter that will sup­port our con­tin­ued efforts in stew­ard­ing one of New York City’s most trea­sured spaces. If you have any ques­tions, please feel free to reach out to us at info@​govisland.​org.

Open Call: 2025 Orga­ni­za­tions in Residence

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Julienne Schaer

The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island announced today the open­ing of its 2025 open call for the sea­son­al Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence pro­gram. Pre­sent­ed through Gov­er­nors Island Arts, the pro­gram offers an excit­ing oppor­tu­ni­ty for arts and cul­tur­al non­prof­its to share their work with the pub­lic and advance their mis­sions in a set­ting unlike any­where else in New York City. Start­ing today, New York-based orga­ni­za­tions are invit­ed to sub­mit an appli­ca­tion to present exhi­bi­tions and pub­lic pro­grams in his­toric spaces on Gov­er­nors Island between May and Octo­ber 2025. Select­ed orga­ni­za­tions will receive space free of charge in the his­toric for­mer mil­i­tary hous­es in Nolan Park and in Colonels Row.

We are excit­ed for anoth­er year of invit­ing our city’s non­prof­it arts and cul­tur­al com­mu­ni­ty to cre­ate on Gov­er­nors Island,” said Lau­ren Haynes, Head Cura­tor, Gov­er­nors Island Arts and Vice Pres­i­dent at the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. The Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence pro­gram and the myr­i­ad artists and cul­tur­al prac­ti­tion­ers that par­tic­i­pate each year help to breathe new life into the Island’s his­toric spaces while pro­vid­ing thought-pro­vok­ing exhi­bi­tions, instal­la­tions, work­shops, and pub­lic pro­grams for the Island’s near­ly one mil­lion annu­al visitors.”

Reflect­ing the diver­si­ty of New York City, Gov­er­nors Island Arts’ sea­son­al Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence present an incred­i­ble range of dynam­ic pro­gram­ming to Gov­er­nors Island vis­i­tors each year. They join a col­lab­o­ra­tive Island com­mu­ni­ty of lead­ing cul­tur­al groups from across New York, who present pro­grams in the fields of visu­al and per­form­ing arts, his­to­ry, archi­tec­ture and design, cli­mate change, ecol­o­gy, sus­tain­abil­i­ty, and more. Togeth­er, the Island’s res­i­dent orga­ni­za­tions hold more than 100 free, pub­lic exhi­bi­tions and out­door projects each year, as well as pro­vide stu­dios and work­space to hun­dreds of artists, writ­ers, researchers, and oth­er cul­tur­al practitioners.

Recent orga­ni­za­tions select­ed as part of this pro­gram have includ­ed the New York Latin Amer­i­can Art Tri­en­ni­al, Amer­i­can Indi­an Com­mu­ni­ty House, Art­Crawl Harlem, BronxArt­Space, Stat­en Island Urban Cen­ter, the West Harlem Art Fund, Low­er East­side Girls Club, Foun­tain House Gallery, Flux Fac­to­ry, the Muse­um of Con­tem­po­rary African Dias­po­ran Art (MoCA­DA), Filmshop, New York Arts Pro­gram, New Art Deal­ers Alliance (NADA), Tai­wanese Amer­i­can Arts Coun­cil, Res­i­den­cy Unlim­it­ed, and the Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um, among many others. 

The full appli­ca­tion is avail­able at www​.gov​is​land​.org/​p​e​rmits. Appli­ca­tions will be accept­ed through Octo­ber 20, 2024, and appli­cants will be noti­fied by Novem­ber 112024.

Appli­ca­tions will be eval­u­at­ed based on the over­all qual­i­ty of the pro­posed pro­gram; fit and align­ment with the Island’s dynam­ic arts, cul­tur­al and edu­ca­tion­al pro­gram­ming; track record of con­cep­tu­al­iz­ing, pro­duc­ing, and orga­niz­ing oth­er pro­grams and events; com­mit­ment to con­nect­ing with diverse audi­ences; and engage­ment with the Island as a site, includ­ing its his­to­ry, ecol­o­gy, archi­tec­ture, and rela­tion­ship to the rest of New York City.

Trust for Gov­er­nors Island Announces New Part­ner­ship with itselectric

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Photo courtesy itselectric

In an excit­ing step for­ward in Gov­er­nors Island’s sus­tain­abil­i­ty efforts, the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island and EV charg­ing start­up its­e­lec­tric announced today a new part­ner­ship to install com­pact, curb­side vehi­cle charg­ing tech­nol­o­gy on the Island, allow­ing the Trust to move towards a zero-emis­sions fleet of oper­a­tions vehi­cles and pro­vid­ing a mod­el for low-impact curb­side charg­ing in cities around the world. 

From urban air qual­i­ty mon­i­tor­ing to com­pact aquapon­ic sys­tems, we are proud to show­case inno­v­a­tive tech­nol­o­gy that will help cities and their res­i­dents fight cli­mate change,” said Clare New­man, Pres­i­dent and CEO of the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. This new part­ner­ship with its­e­lec­tric is the per­fect exam­ple of what’s pos­si­ble here on Gov­er­nors Island, enabling us to mod­ern­ize our fleet of oper­a­tions vehi­cles while dra­mat­i­cal­ly cut­ting our emis­sions and demon­strat­ing the excit­ing future of cli­mate solu­tions for New York City and cities around the world.” 

Our part­ner­ship with the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island is a tes­ta­ment to the way enti­ties of any size can lead progress toward decar­boniza­tion through break­ing down bar­ri­ers to EV adop­tion,” said Judy Chang, Project Direc­tor at its­e­lec­tric. We’re proud to bring our sleek urban charg­ers, deploy­able in just days, to the Island in sup­port of its tran­si­tion to an all-elec­tric oper­a­tions fleet, mak­ing the air even clean­er for every­one who vis­its. This col­lab­o­ra­tion reflects our mis­sion to address press­ing cli­mate chal­lenges by lever­ag­ing exist­ing infra­struc­ture in any urban envi­ron­ment — from a 172-acre, car-free island to the biggest cities in the country.” 

Empire State Devel­op­ment Pres­i­dent, CEO and Com­mis­sion­er Hope Knight said, Empire State Development’s $500,000 seed invest­ment in it’s elec­tric’ through NY Ven­tures is already bear­ing fruit, as evi­denced by this excit­ing deploy­ment on Gov­er­nors Island. By back­ing inno­v­a­tive cli­mate tech­nolo­gies like their com­pact charg­ing sta­tions at an ear­ly stage, we’re not only pow­er­ing the island’s elec­tric fleet but also dri­ving for­ward New York’s com­mit­ment to clean ener­gy. This project rep­re­sents promis­ing progress since our ini­tial invest­ment, and we hope it’s just the first of many future deploy­ments across New York State.”

Gov­er­nors Island is one of New York City’s most unique pub­lic places, with sev­en miles of car-free streets and path­ways allow­ing for safe recre­ation­al oppor­tu­ni­ties and pro­vid­ing a bucol­ic atmos­phere for a grow­ing com­mu­ni­ty of year-round ten­ants and sea­son­al part­ners. The Trust main­tains a small fleet of vehi­cles to allow staff to effec­tive­ly care for the Island’s 120 acres of open space and is com­mit­ted to pri­or­i­tiz­ing elec­tric vehi­cles to help move to net-zero oper­a­tions. To sup­port these goals, its­e­lec­tric will install five of its Level‑2 charg­ing posts across the Island and inside the Bat­tery Mar­itime Build­ing fer­ry ter­mi­nal for oper­a­tional use. This unique tech­nol­o­gy con­nects behind-the-meter to draw spare elec­tri­cal sup­ply from adja­cent build­ings, lever­ag­ing exist­ing resources and pro­vid­ing a mod­el for wide­spread instal­la­tion. its­e­lec­tric charg­ing posts have pre­vi­ous­ly been installed in Brook­lyn, New York, Detroit, Michi­gan, with a crit­i­cal focus on front­line and Jus­tice 40 com­mu­ni­ties to bring afford­able, equi­table, curb­side EV charg­ing to city dri­vers across the Unit­ed States. 

Today’s announce­ment is the lat­est in Gov­er­nors Island’s recent progress towards wide­spread zero-emis­sions trans­porta­tion infra­struc­ture. In March 2023, New York City May­or Eric Adams and the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island announced that the Island would be home to New York City’s first pub­lic, hybrid-elec­tric fer­ry, which is sched­uled to begin ser­vice lat­er this year. Fol­low­ing that announce­ment, New York City was award­ed a $7.48 mil­lion grant from the US Fed­er­al Tran­sit Admin­is­tra­tion to sup­port shore­side rapid charg­ing infra­struc­ture on Gov­er­nors Island, which will enable the Island’s new hybrid elec­tric fer­ry to oper­ate 100% elec­tric with bat­tery-only propulsion. 

This tech­nol­o­gy joins sev­er­al oth­er inno­va­tions cur­rent­ly being demon­strat­ed on Gov­er­nors Island, includ­ing indoor aquapon­ic farm­ing (GrowNYC), com­mu­ni­ty sci­ence air qual­i­ty mon­i­tor­ing (South Bronx Unite), decen­tral­ized car­bon mon­i­tor­ing and mit­i­ga­tion (Vycarb), and post-con­sumer plas­tic recy­cling and repur­pos­ing (Cir­cu­lar Econ­o­my Man­u­fac­tur­ing). Through its cli­mate pilot­ing pro­gram, the Trust offers the unique oppor­tu­ni­ty for star­tups, small busi­ness­es, non­prof­its, and entre­pre­neurs to test cli­mate solu­tions that address mit­i­ga­tion, adap­ta­tion, and envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice. Solu­tions select­ed through the Trust’s inau­gur­al Cli­mate Solu­tions Chal­lenge ear­li­er this year include urban sea­weed farm­ing (Sea­weed City), liv­ing shore­line con­struc­tion and cli­mate work­force devel­op­ment (RETI Cen­ter), coastal infra­struc­ture retro­fitting (Object Ter­ri­to­ries), decen­tral­ized point-of-use grey­wa­ter treat­ment (LAERO), mod­u­lar wet­land sys­tems (Just EcoC­i­ties), and IoT envi­ron­men­tal mon­i­tor­ing (Duro UAS). For more infor­ma­tion, vis­it www​.gov​is​land​.org/​c​l​imate.

With a unique water­front cam­pus envi­ron­ment; an award-win­ning park engi­neered for cli­mate change; a diverse and engaged audi­ence of near­ly one mil­lion vis­i­tors every year; cli­mate pilot­ing and edu­ca­tion oppor­tu­ni­ties; a col­lec­tion of pub­lic art­works engag­ing direct­ly with cli­mate issues; and a grow­ing com­mu­ni­ty of edu­ca­tion­al, non­prof­it, and com­mer­cial ten­ants — includ­ing Bil­lion Oys­ter Project, the Urban Assem­bly New York Har­bor School, Beam Cen­ter, Wind Sup­port NYC, the soon-to-open But­ter­milk Labs, and The New York Cli­mate Exchange — Gov­er­nors Island is at the fore­front of research­ing and demon­strat­ing cli­mate solu­tions built for cities. 

Gov­er­nors Island is open to the pub­lic dai­ly year-round and is acces­si­ble by fer­ry from Man­hat­tan and Brook­lyn. For cur­rent fer­ry sched­ules, oper­at­ing hours, and oth­er vis­i­tor infor­ma­tion, vis­it www​.gov​is​land​.org/​p​l​a​n​-​y​o​u​r​-​visit.

Gov­er­nors Island Arts Announces Fall 2024 Season

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Gov­er­nors Island Arts today announced a sched­ule of free pro­gram­ming and exhi­bi­tions for the Island’s fall sea­son, includ­ing the con­tin­u­a­tion of the INTER­VEN­TIONS per­for­mance series with works by Inua Ellams and Lenio Kak­lea along with new exhi­bi­tions from the New Art Deal­ers Alliance (NADA), Escap­ing Time: Art from U.S. Pris­ons, and oth­er NYC-based non­prof­it orga­ni­za­tions. This fall also marks the last chance to vis­it Jen­ny Kendler’s Oth­er of Pearl, pre­sent­ed by Gov­er­nors Island Arts and Nat­ur­al Resources Defense Coun­cil (NRDC), which is on view inside Fort Jay Fri­day-Sun­day through Novem­ber 3

There is so much to dis­cov­er on Gov­er­nors Island, whether you’re com­ing to see — and even par­tic­i­pate in — a per­for­mance that’s in direct con­ver­sa­tion with our land­scapes, to explore our his­toric hous­es and the incred­i­ble orga­ni­za­tions with­in them, or to dis­cov­er our col­lec­tion of one-of-a-kind pub­lic art­works,” said Lau­ren Haynes, Head Cura­tor, Gov­er­nors Island Arts and Vice Pres­i­dent at the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. We are thrilled to con­tin­ue to spot­light our amaz­ing cul­tur­al com­mu­ni­ty as the sea­sons change and can’t wait to wel­come you to the Island this fall.”

INTER­VEN­TIONS Per­for­mance Series
Through this site-respon­sive, mul­ti­dis­ci­pli­nary annu­al per­for­mance series, Gov­er­nors Island Arts presents local, nation­al, and inter­na­tion­al artists and invites audi­ences to expe­ri­ence work made and adapt­ed for the out­doors. INTER­VEN­TIONS con­tin­ues this fall with Search Par­ty, award-win­ning poet and inter­na­tion­al­ly acclaimed play­wright Inua Ellams’s spon­ta­neous per­for­mance event, and Anal­phabètes, a dance piece by Lenio Kak­lea and co-pre­sent­ed with L’Alliance New York. 

SEARCH PAR­TY Inua Ellams
Sep­tem­ber 20, 7:30pm
Sep­tem­ber 21, 2:15 pm & 7:30pm
CLICK HERE FOR TICKETS »

Prompt­ed by audi­ence sug­ges­tion and open con­ver­sa­tion, Inua Ellams search­es through his archive, unearths refined or raw gold, and presents his trea­sure in this spon­ta­neous per­for­mance — an act of call and response that hear­kens back to the birth of sto­ry­telling. At this unique­ly futur­is­tic and espe­cial­ly chaot­ic inter­ac­tive event — its first ever out­door iter­a­tion — the artist could­n’t be more present.

ANAL­PHABÈTES Lenio Kak­lea
Octo­ber 5, 12pm, 2pm & 4pm
CLICK HERE FOR TICKETS »

Greek-born and Paris-based chore­o­g­ra­ph­er Lenio Kak­lea designed this piece as a response to phys­i­cal land­scape. Con­sist­ing of three dis­tinct lev­els of spec­ta­tor­ship — near, far, and very far away — the per­for­mance blends envi­ron­ment with chore­o­graph­ic image, cre­at­ing a struc­ture that orga­nizes the audience’s visu­al expe­ri­ence. On Gov­er­nors Island, the piece will be per­formed and reimag­ined by local dancers and built in direct response to its envi­ron­ment. Co-Pre­sent­ed with L’Alliance New York as part of Cross­ing the Line Festival

Pre­vi­ous per­for­mances pre­sent­ed as part of INTER­VEN­TIONS include works by Modesto Flako” Jimenez, Indige­nous Enter­prise, Dance Hegin­both­am, and Rena Anakwe. INTER­VEN­TIONS is curat­ed by Juan Pablo Siles, Asso­ciate Cura­tor and Pro­duc­er at the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. 

Orga­ni­za­tions in Residence

Each year, two dozen arts, cul­ture, edu­ca­tion­al, and envi­ron­men­tal non­prof­its uti­lize space inside the his­toric hous­es of Nolan Park and Colonels Row to present a robust cal­en­dar of free pub­lic pro­grams, host artist res­i­den­cies, and engage vis­i­tors in spe­cial activ­i­ties for all ages through­out the sum­mer months. Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence are open every Fri­day, Sat­ur­day, and Sun­day from 11am to 5pm through the end of October. 

Orga­ni­za­tions join­ing the cur­rent group of non­prof­its in Nolan Park and Colonels Row for the fall sea­son include New Art Deal­ers Alliance (NADA) and Escap­ing Time: Art from U.S. Pris­ons, along with sev­er­al new exhi­bi­tions and events from the cur­rent Orga­ni­za­tions in Res­i­dence. NADA will present the sixth edi­tion of NADA House, bring­ing togeth­er 17 exhibitors from around the world pre­sent­ing 21 artists, with par­tic­i­pants engag­ing the unique char­ac­ter of the house’s his­toric space and exhibit­ing work in a diverse range of medi­ums. Escap­ing Time will exhib­it and sell art­works cre­at­ed with­in prison walls nation­wide, work­ing to dis­rupt the stereo­type soci­ety imag­ines when think­ing about the incarcerated. 

CLICK HERE TO MEET ALL OF THIS YEAR’S ORGA­NI­ZA­TIONS IN RESIDENCE »

Pub­lic Art Commissions

Jen­ny Kendler’s Oth­er of Pearl, pre­sent­ed by Gov­er­nors Island Arts and NRDC, will debut new fall hours begin­ning Sep­tem­ber 9, 2024 — the piece will be open Fri­day-Sun­day from 10am-5pm through Novem­ber 3, 2024. Locat­ed in the his­toric Fort Jay, Oth­er of Pearl fea­tures a series of sev­en inti­mate, del­i­cate works that con­front con­tem­po­rary envi­ron­men­tal issues — ocean noise, chem­i­cal pol­lu­tion, cli­mate change and sea lev­el rise — while call­ing atten­tion to the extrac­tive his­to­ries that form the ori­gin sto­ries of our cli­mate crisis. 

There are cur­rent­ly sev­en addi­tion­al tem­po­rary and long-term pub­lic art­works on dis­play through­out Gov­er­nors Island’s park and his­toric land­scapes, includ­ing Sheila Berger’s BIRD MMXXI­II, Sam Van Aken’s The Open Orchard, Duke Riley’s Not for Nut­ten, Mark Dion’s The Field Sta­tion of the Melan­choly Marine Biol­o­gist, Shantell Martin’s Church, Rachel Whiteread’s Cab­in, and Mark Handforth’s Yan­kee Hang­er.

CLICK HERE TO VIEW ALL PUB­LIC ART COMMISSIONS »

Gov­er­nors Island Arts presents its pro­gram­ming with the vision­ary sup­port of the Ford Foun­da­tion, as well the Mel­lon Foun­da­tion, the Cha­ri­na Endow­ment Fund, Don­ald R. Mullen Fam­i­ly Foun­da­tion, Stavros Niar­chos Foun­da­tion, Bloomberg Phil­an­thropies, The Gottes­man Fund, Don­ald A. Pels Char­i­ta­ble Trust, the Nation­al Endow­ment for the Arts, and the New York State Coun­cil on the Arts with the sup­port of the Office of the Gov­er­nor and the New York State Legislature.

Pho­to cred­its, L to R: Inua Ellams by Myah Jef­fers, cour­tesy the artist; Whale Bells, 2023, by Andrew Bearnot & Jen­ny Kendler as fea­tured in Kendler’s Oth­er of Pearl,” art­work cour­tesy the artist and the Tar­ble Arts Cen­ter and pho­to by Juli­enne Schaer; Anal­pha­betes, pho­to cour­tesy L’Al­liance New York; and Escap­ing Time: Art from U.S. Pris­ons 2023 exhi­bi­tion, pho­to by Juli­enne Schaer.

Trust for Gov­er­nors Island & The New York Cli­mate Exchange Announce Cli­mate Week on Gov­er­nors Island

...

Sean Jamar

The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island and The New York Cli­mate Exchange announced today a sched­ule of more than 35 Cli­mate Week activ­i­ties tak­ing place on Gov­er­nors Island. Fea­tured cli­mate-focused pro­grams include guid­ed sus­tain­abil­i­ty tours, film screen­ings, tech show­cas­es, writ­ing and sto­ry­telling work­shops, and more. Events announced today high­light Gov­er­nors Island’s trans­for­ma­tion as a grow­ing resource for research and inno­va­tion in equi­table cli­mate solu­tions for New York City and the world.

Our admin­is­tra­tion is set­ting the pace in the fight against cli­mate change, acti­vat­ing $725 mil­lion in pub­lic invest­ments to sup­port the Har­bor Cli­mate Col­lab­o­ra­tive, build­ing out our work­force to host 400,000 green jobs by 2040, and launch­ing the Cli­mate Exchange on Gov­er­nors Island in the mid­dle of New York Har­bor,” said Deputy May­or for Hous­ing, Eco­nom­ic Devel­op­ment and Work­force Maria Tor­res-Springer. I am excit­ed to see this robust week of pro­gram­ming from the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island and the New York Cli­mate Exchange to pre­view the inno­v­a­tive resources, events, and cur­ricu­lum that will be brought to the island through this once-in-a-gen­er­a­tion partnership.”

Each year, Cli­mate Week NYC offers a remark­able oppor­tu­ni­ty to wit­ness first­hand how New York City is lead­ing the fight against cli­mate change and build­ing a stronger, more equi­table, and more resilient city,” said Clare New­man, Pres­i­dent and CEO of the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island. Our cal­en­dar of events — Gov­er­nors Island’s biggest Cli­mate Week offer­ing to date — high­lights pro­gram­ming from the Trust, the Exchange, and the vibrant com­mu­ni­ty of cli­mate-focused ten­ants and part­ners here on the Island, shin­ing a light on this extra­or­di­nary space’s evo­lu­tion as a hub for urban cli­mate solutions.” 

Cli­mate Week NYC attracts a glob­al audi­ence, and I’m excit­ed that this year we’re cre­at­ing a new go-to” loca­tion and cli­mate week expe­ri­ence,” said Stephen Ham­mer, CEO of The New York Cli­mate Exchange. Vis­i­tors can par­tic­i­pate in dis­cus­sions about the lat­est cli­mate pol­i­cy and finance dis­cus­sions, meet dozens of cli­mate tech entre­pre­neurs, and learn how inno­va­tors are try­ing to engage the pub­lic on cli­mate issues through an arts and cul­ture lens. Our pro­gram­ming will offer a sense of what we’ll do on a much big­ger scale once our full Gov­er­nors Island cam­pus is oper­a­tional in 2028.” 

In April 2023, May­or Eric Adams and the Trust announced The Exchange as the anchor research and edu­ca­tion­al part­ner for Gov­er­nors Island’s cli­mate ini­tia­tives. The Exchange, a new, 

non­prof­it ini­tia­tive estab­lished by Stony Brook Uni­ver­si­ty and a con­sor­tium of uni­ver­si­ties, busi­ness­es, and non­prof­it orga­ni­za­tions, will cre­ate a state-of-the-art, $700-mil­lion cam­pus on Gov­er­nors Island. This facil­i­ty will be ded­i­cat­ed to edu­ca­tion­al pro­gram­ming, research, cli­mate tech incu­ba­tion, and pol­i­cy work aimed at advanc­ing cli­mate action in New York City and else­where around the world. The full cam­pus is sched­uled to open to the pub­lic in 2028, but Exchange pro­gram­ming has already launched on Gov­er­nors Island and around the city.

Cli­mate Week NYC 2024 events on Gov­er­nors Island are orga­nized by the Trust, the Island’s com­mu­ni­ty of part­ners and ten­ants, and The Exchange and its core part­ners. Events will take place across Gov­er­nors Island, includ­ing at a new com­mu­ni­ty con­ven­ing space inside the for­mer Our Lady Star of the Sea — a decon­se­crat­ed for­mer mil­i­tary chapel locat­ed in the Island’s His­toric Dis­trict that fea­tures Church, Shantell Martin’s pop­u­lar pub­lic art­work com­mis­sioned through Gov­er­nors Island Arts, on its façade. This his­toric build­ing has recent­ly under­gone upgrades to cre­ate an acces­si­ble indoor space for com­mu­ni­ty events on Gov­er­nors Island.

A full sched­ule of events and pre­sent­ing orga­ni­za­tions can be found below and online at www​.gov​is​land​.org/​c​l​i​m​a​t​e​-week, with more to be announced in the com­ing weeks. 

Cli­mate Week NYC on Gov­er­nors Island Schedule:

ONGO­ING: Oth­er of Pearl, Jen­ny Kendler Gov­er­nors Island Arts and NRDC (Nat­ur­al Resources Defense Coun­cil) Open Wednes­day-Sun­day through Octo­ber 31 in Fort Jay — Pub­lic art instal­la­tion that tells the sto­ry of the extrac­tive his­to­ries that form the ori­gin sto­ries of the cli­mate and envi­ron­men­tal cri­sis, while con­sid­er­ing the oys­ter and whale as cen­tral play­ers in an eco­log­i­cal entan­gle­ment between human and non­hu­man beings, water­ways, and flows of cap­i­tal. Through sev­en del­i­cate works, the artist con­fronts con­tem­po­rary envi­ron­men­tal issues — cli­mate change, ocean noise, chem­i­cal pol­lu­tion, bio­di­ver­si­ty loss, and sea lev­el rise — while point­ing towards the cul­tur­al struc­tures that have allowed these cat­a­stro­phes to occur.

ONGO­ING: Sari Carel: A More Per­fect Cir­cle, KODA Open Fri­day-Sun­day through Octo­ber 31 in Colonels Row Build­ing 407B — Artist and activist Sari Carel presents a series of ceram­ic sculp­tures inspired by the sin­gle-use cof­fee cup, uncov­er­ing a sense of pow­er­less­ness and con­flict about a choice at the cen­ter of a dai­ly rou­tine. This pub­lic art instal­la­tion explores what hap­pens to this item when tossed into the trash can, and why we take it for granted.

ONGO­ING: [SUN] Flower Waves, Har­vest­works Open Fri­day-Sun­day through Octo­ber 31 in Nolan Park Build­ing 10A — This dig­i­tal media instal­la­tion by Vic­to­ria Ves­na in col­lab­o­ra­tion with Wal­ter Gekel­man explores the har­mo­nious inter­ac­tion between sun­flow­ers and Alfvén waves, demon­strat­ing how art and sci­ence con­verge to reveal deep­er understandings.

Sep­tem­ber 21, 1 – 4PM: Play is Pow­er: Design Your Own Cli­mate Game, Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um Colonels Row Build­ing 406A — In this series of con­sec­u­tive, hour-long work­shops, par­tic­i­pants will be guid­ed step-by-step through the process of design­ing their very own Cli­mate Game: a table­top, role-play­ing, or out­door game that explores a cli­mate issue of their choosing. 

Sep­tem­ber 21, 10AM-12PM & 2 – 4PM: Melt­ing Metrop­o­lis & Com­mu­ni­ty Spon­sor Lab Walk, Well­come Trust & The New York Cli­mate Exchange

Sep­tem­ber 22, 1 – 3PM: Earth, Wind, and Water demon­stra­tion, Earth Mat­ter NY Urban Farm — Dis­cov­er the role organ­ic mat­ter plays in water reten­tion, ero­sion con­trol, and car­bon sequestration.

Sep­tem­ber 22, 1 – 4PM: Day of Action / Engage­ment, NYU & New York Cli­mate Exchange 

Sep­tem­ber 22, 2 – 2:30PM: Cli­mate Week Seed Col­lect­ing, The Bee Con­ser­van­cy Urban Farm — Col­lect seeds with the Bee Con­ser­van­cy at their Bee Sanc­tu­ary on Gov­er­nors Island’s Urban Farm — par­tic­i­pants will get seed col­lect­ing tips, learn about seed strat­i­fi­ca­tion and ger­mi­na­tion, and hear how cli­mate and its changes impact the bee and plant species on Gov­er­nors Island and beyond.

Sep­tem­ber 22 – 25, 5 – 7PM: Cli­mate Week Walk­ing Tours, Bil­lion Oys­ter Project Nolan Park Build­ing 16 — Join a Cli­mate Week walk­ing tour to explore Bil­lion Oys­ter Project’s vibrant efforts in restor­ing New York Har­bor’s oys­ter reefs and their impact on com­bat­ing cli­mate change.

Sep­tem­ber 23, 9 – 11AM: New Rec­om­men­da­tions for Cli­mate Actions in Cities from ARC3.3, Urban Cli­mate Change Research Net­work & New York Cli­mate Exchange (by invi­ta­tion only)

Sep­tem­ber 23, 12 – 3PM: Extreme Heat Sur­vival Through a Pub­lic Health Lens: Intro­duc­ing Project HEAT­WAVE (Part1), NYU & The New York Cli­mate Exchange (by invi­ta­tion only)

Sep­tem­ber 23, 3 – 4:30PM: Ready Set Act! An Eth­i­cal Frame­work for a Rapid­ly Chang­ing Cli­mate Com­mu­ni­ty, Amer­i­can Geo­phys­i­cal Union & New York Cli­mate Exchange (by invi­ta­tion only)

Sep­tem­ber 23, 5 – 7PM: Urban@UW’s Research to Action Col­lab­o­ra­to­ry, Uni­ver­si­ty of Wash­ing­ton & The New York Cli­mate Exchange (by invi­ta­tion only)

Sep­tem­ber 24, 10AM-1PM: Solu­tions to the Ener­gy Tran­si­tion Chal­lenges in the NYC Region, Stony Brook Uni­ver­si­ty & New York Cli­mate Exchange (by invi­ta­tion only)

Sep­tem­ber 24, 10AM-2PM: Adaptation(s) 2.0 Guid­ed Tours, Pratt Insti­tute Cen­ter for Cli­mate Adap­ta­tion Nolan Park Build­ing 14 — Guid­ed tour of exhi­bi­tions that spot­light dif­fer­ent per­spec­tives on cli­mate adap­ta­tion and strate­gies in arch­i­pel­a­gos — com­mu­ni­ties at the great­est risk and in need of find­ing liv­able solu­tions for future cli­mate change. 

Sep­tem­ber 24, 3 – 5:30PM: Charg­ing Ahead: Glob­al Strate­gies for Bus Elec­tri­fi­ca­tion, Crux Alliance & The New York Cli­mate Exchange

Sep­tem­ber 24, 4 – 6PM: IA Island(ing) Adap­ta­tions Dis­cus­sion, Pratt Insti­tute Cen­ter for Cli­mate Adap­ta­tion Admiral’s House — Pan­el dis­cus­sion bring­ing togeth­er rep­re­sen­ta­tion from high lev­el gov­ern­ment offi­cials, inno­v­a­tive design­ers, finan­cial lead­ers, and pol­i­cy mak­ers. Par­tic­i­pants will share their per­spec­tives and engage one anoth­er and the audi­ence in dis­cus­sion through a mod­er­at­ed dis­cus­sion and a Q&A.

Sep­tem­ber 24, 4 – 6PM: Adaptation(s) 2.0, Pratt Insti­tute Cen­ter for Cli­mate Adap­ta­tion & New York Cli­mate Exchange (by invi­ta­tion only) — Join for a guid­ed exhi­bi­tion tour and pan­el discussion.

Sep­tem­ber 25, 9AM-6PM: NYCE Cli­mate Tech Show­case, The New York Cli­mate Exchange 

Sep­tem­ber 26, 10 – 11:30 AM: Imag­in­ing Cli­mate Resilient and Thriv­ing Com­mu­ni­ties through Youth Edu­ca­tion Pro­grams, Geor­gia Tech & New York Cli­mate Exchange

Sep­tem­ber 26, Liv­ing Build­ings are Resilient Build­ings: Cli­mate Mit­i­ga­tion AND Adap­ta­tion, Geor­gia Tech & New York Cli­mate Exchange (by invi­ta­tion only)

Sep­tem­ber 26, 6:30 – 8:30PM: Film Screen­ing and Pan­el: Get­ting Out­side the Cli­mate Bub­ble,” Well­come Trust & The New York Cli­mate Exchange

Sep­tem­ber 27, 1 – 3PM: Healthy Choic­es, Healthy Plan­et: Cli­mate Aware­ness in Health Edu­ca­tion, Pace Uni­ver­si­ty & New York Cli­mate Exchange (by invi­ta­tion only)

Sep­tem­ber 27, 11AM-1PM: Sus­tain­able Sto­ry­telling: On and Off Cam­era, Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um and the Micro-Plas­ti­na­tion” film crew Colonels Row Build­ing 406A — Learn what makes an impact­ful sto­ry that inspires change both on and off cam­era. This pan­el will include a mix­er with oth­er media-mak­ers and a pre­view of an upcom­ing short film: Micro-Plas­ti­na­tion.”

Sep­tem­ber 27, 1 – 4PM: Sus­tain­able Sto­ries: Cli­mate, Food, and Cul­ture through Diverse Voic­es, Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um and The Uproot Project Colonels Row Build­ing 406A — A keynote on the inter­sec­tion of diver­si­ty, cul­ture, and food as cli­mate solu­tions, fol­lowed by a pan­el dis­cus­sion and work­shop offer­ing sto­ry­telling tech­niques for envi­ron­men­tal jour­nal­ism and insights into high­light­ing these cru­cial intersections.

Sep­tem­ber 28, 10AM-5PM: Imag­i­nary Acoustic Visions of Cas­tle Williams, Har­vest­works & New York Cli­mate Exchange

Sep­tem­ber 28 & 29, 11AM-1PM: Cli­mate Fic­tion Work­shop with Author Susan Kaye Quinn, Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um and the NYC Cli­mate Writ­ers Col­lec­tive Colonels Row Build­ing 406A — Write a sto­ry to build a bet­ter world! This event, orga­nized by the NYC Cli­mate Writ­ers Col­lec­tive, will spark cre­ativ­i­ty in every­one — no mat­ter their pre­vi­ous writ­ing experience.

Sep­tem­ber 28, 11AM-5PM: Flower Plas­ma by Vic­to­ria Ves­na in col­lab­o­ra­tion with plas­ma physi­cist Wal­ter Gekel­man and bio­med­ical engi­neer Haley Marks, Har­vest­works Nolan Park Build­ing 10A — Spe­cial instal­la­tion fea­tur­ing sound and images from UCLA’s Large Plas­ma Device, solar wind data from NASA’s Park­er Solar Probe, and nat­ur­al record­ings — offer­ing an immer­sive med­i­ta­tion on solar ener­gy and the cycle of cre­ation and destruction.

Sep­tem­ber 28, 1 – 3PM: Cli­mate Café at the Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um, Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um Colonels Row Build­ing 406A — An uplift­ing after­noon of refresh­ments, med­i­ta­tion, and a mean­ing­ful con­ver­sa­tion on cli­mate emo­tions. Par­tic­i­pants can enjoy cof­fee and snacks with oth­ers in the cli­mate com­mu­ni­ty as they share their feel­ings and get to know oth­ers in the movement.

Sep­tem­ber 28, 2 – 2:30PM: Gar­den­ing for Cli­mate Change, GrowNYC Urban Farm —  This guid­ed tour will focus on how cli­mate change will impact gar­den­ing, what GrowNYC’s Teach­ing Gar­den on Gov­er­nors Island does to mit­i­gate its impact on cli­mate change, and how gar­dens can adapt to a chang­ing climate.

Sep­tem­ber 28, 2 – 3:30PM: Cli­mate Week Pol­li­na­tor Walk, The Bee Con­ser­van­cy Urban Farm — Learn about New York City’s pol­li­na­tors (and the habi­tats that sup­port them) and explore nature through a pollinator’s lens with an expe­ri­enced guide from the Bee Conservancy. 

Sep­tem­ber 28, 2 – 3:30PM: Gov­er­nors Island Bird Tour, NYC Bird Alliance and the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island Colonels Row Build­ing 405B — Whether you’re an expert bird­er or a begin­ner, this guid­ed tour — led by an NYC Bird Alliance edu­ca­tor along with the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island’s arborist — will help you dis­cov­er all of the birdlife the Island has to offer, and how the Island’s trees pro­vide vital habitat. 

Sep­tem­ber 28, 2:30 – 3PM: Imag­ined Futures: Grief & Seeds, Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um and Holes in the Wall Col­lec­tive Colonels Row Build­ing 406A — Vis­it the Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um for three embod­ied activ­i­ties to learn about alter­na­tive time scales — bear­ing wit­ness to our fear and our col­lec­tive respon­si­bil­i­ty to where we go from here. 

Sep­tem­ber 28, 3 – 5PM: The Chase (EP) Release Par­ty: A Cli­mate Week Jam, Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um and Cre­dle Enter­tain­ment Colonels Row Build­ing 406A — Cel­e­brate the close of Cli­mate Week with the release of CREDLE’s 5th stu­dio project, The Chase (EP), an Afropop, R&B, and House genre-focused music project.

Sep­tem­ber 29, 3 – 5PM: Grief & Seeds: Hon­or­ing the Past, Cre­at­ing the Future, Cli­mate Imag­i­nar­i­um, Holes in the Wall Col­lec­tive, Amer­i­can Indi­an Com­mu­ni­ty House Colonels Row Build­ing 406A — Close out Cli­mate Week with inten­tion at this gath­er­ing to hon­or place and pos­si­bil­i­ty. Fea­tur­ing elder and activist Jk Canepa, youth orga­niz­er Anna Tso­mo with youth from 6th St. Com­mu­ni­ty Cli­mate Action group, a pop­up seed gath­er­ing with Next Epoch Seed Library, and a clos­ing rit­u­al led by Noelle Ghous­sai­ni of Sacred Space. 

Sep­tem­ber 28, 3 – 6PM: Remem­ber Ida: A 3rd Anniver­sary Pod­cast Lis­ten­ing Ses­sion and Reflec­tion Cir­cle, Queens Mem­o­ry Project & New York Cli­mate Exchange

On View Dai­ly: Gov­er­nors Island Arts Pub­lic Artworks

Gov­er­nors Island Arts, the arts and cul­tur­al pro­gram pre­sent­ed by the Trust, boasts a diverse col­lec­tion of pub­lic art pieces, sev­er­al of which engage direct­ly with issues of cli­mate and the environment: 

  • Sam Van Aken’s The Open Orchard, locat­ed in The Hills with­in the Island’s award-win­ning park, takes the form of a vast pub­lic orchard of hybrid fruit trees, each con­tain­ing mul­ti­ple heir­loom vari­eties that were once found in abun­dance in the New York City area but have large­ly dis­ap­peared due to cli­mate change and the indus­tri­al­iza­tion of agriculture.
  • Mark Dion’s The Field Sta­tion of the Melan­choly Marine Biol­o­gist, locat­ed inside Build­ing 105 across from Fort Jay, trans­forms a his­toric for­mer arse­nal build­ing into an aban­doned research out­post that invites vis­i­tors to peer inside and imag­ine the life of a soli­tary researcher faced with the real­i­ties of a future marred by cli­mate change.
  • Duke Riley’s Not for Nut­ten, locat­ed in the Bat­tery Mar­itime Build­ing fer­ry ter­mi­nal at 10 South Street in Man­hat­tan, is a large-scale mur­al depict­ing vignettes from the Island’s his­to­ry con­tained with­in mod­ern-day sin­gle-use plas­tic con­tain­ers found float­ing in oceans world­wide in a play on the tra­di­tion­al ship in a bottle.”

Orga­nized by the Cli­mate Group, Cli­mate Week NYC runs Sep­tem­ber 22 – 29, 2024, and is the largest annu­al cli­mate event of its kind. With a unique water­front cam­pus envi­ron­ment, an award-win­ning park engi­neered for cli­mate change; a diverse and engaged audi­ence of near­ly one mil­lion vis­i­tors every year; cli­mate pilot­ing and edu­ca­tion oppor­tu­ni­ties; a col­lec­tion of pub­lic art com­mis­sions engag­ing direct­ly with cli­mate issues; and a grow­ing com­mu­ni­ty of edu­ca­tion­al, non­prof­it, and com­mer­cial ten­ants — includ­ing Bil­lion Oys­ter Project, the Urban Assem­bly New York Har­bor School, Beam Cen­ter, Wind Sup­port NYC, the soon-to-open But­ter­milk Labs, and The New York Cli­mate Exchange — Gov­er­nors Island is at the fore­front of research­ing and demon­strat­ing cli­mate solu­tions built for cities. 

The Trust’s Gov­er­nors Island Cli­mate pro­grams are made pos­si­ble with the gen­er­ous sup­port of Ama­zon, Con Edi­son, Deutsche Bank, the Don­ald A. Pels Char­i­ta­ble Trust, LISC, and the New York Com­mu­ni­ty Trust.

About the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island

The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island is the non­prof­it cor­po­ra­tion cre­at­ed by the City of New York that is respon­si­ble for the rede­vel­op­ment and oper­a­tion of 150 acres of Gov­er­nors Island. The Trust’s mis­sion is to real­ize the full poten­tial of Gov­er­nors Island for the inspi­ra­tion and enjoy­ment of all New York­ers, demon­strat­ing a bold vision for pub­lic space. For more infor­ma­tion, vis­it www​.gov​is​land​.org.

About The New York Cli­mate Exchange

The New York Cli­mate Exchange (The Exchange) is a new not-for-prof­it cli­mate solu­tions cen­ter designed to build com­mu­ni­ty, fos­ter col­lab­o­ra­tion, advance cli­mate knowl­edge, and empow­er mar­gin­al­ized com­mu­ni­ties through cross-dis­ci­pli­nary net­work­ing, impact­ful pro­gram­ming, and cut­ting-edge facil­i­ties. While The Exchange will have a phys­i­cal pres­ence on Gov­er­nors Island, its spir­it and influ­ence will extend beyond the Island into New York City and across the coun­try and world. Our diverse coali­tion of part­ners — com­mit­ted and pre­pared to col­lec­tive­ly dis­rupt the sta­tus quo — incor­po­rates local and glob­al per­spec­tives on cli­mate change from acad­e­mia, the pri­vate sec­tor, and com­mu­ni­ty-lev­el orga­ni­za­tions. As the first of its kind, The Exchange will unlock inte­grat­ed and scal­able approach­es to sus­tain­abil­i­ty, ulti­mate­ly serv­ing as a glob­al mod­el for sus­tain­able pos­i­tive change. 

Cli­mate Solu­tions in Action on Gov­er­nors Island

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Photo by Sean Jamar

Guest post by Col­by Dor­cé­ly, Cli­mate Pro­grams Intern at the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island

In June 2023, the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island launched its Cli­mate Solu­tions Pilot­ing Pro­gram, a call for pilot­ing and demon­stra­tion projects address­ing cli­mate mit­i­ga­tion, cli­mate adap­ta­tion, and envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice in New York City and cities around the world. One year lat­er, after select­ing the inau­gur­al cohort of pilot­ing projects, the Trust held its first cli­mate demo days fea­tur­ing projects includ­ing inno­va­tions relat­ed to liv­ing shore­lines, urban aqua­cul­ture, water and air qual­i­ty, and indoor agri­cul­ture. Through­out these two events, vis­i­tors had the oppor­tu­ni­ty to inter­act with these inno­v­a­tive projects and the pas­sion­ate indi­vid­u­als behind them. 

The work being show­cased on Gov­er­nors Island demon­strates the Trust’s efforts to cre­ate real-world oppor­tu­ni­ties for inno­va­tion, sup­port the growth of ear­ly-stage com­pa­nies, and engage New York­ers in the cli­mate solu­tions that are cre­at­ing the jobs of the future. Pilot­ing at Gov­er­nors Island sup­ports New York City’s Green Econ­o­my Action Plan, which address­es the chal­lenge of cli­mate change while cre­at­ing trans­for­ma­tive oppor­tu­ni­ties for com­pa­nies and New York­ers across the five boroughs. 

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Deputy Mayor Maria Torres-Springer addressing the audience at the Climate Demo Day Preview event on Governors Island, July 11, 2024. Photo by Sean Jamar.


On Thurs­day, July 11, 2024, the Island wel­comed over 100 atten­dees from var­i­ous sec­tors of the cli­mate world for a Cli­mate Demo Day Pre­view event, includ­ing fun­ders, inno­va­tors, and pol­i­cy­mak­ers. The event opened with a wel­come by Deputy May­or Maria Tor­res-Springer, who has been a crit­i­cal cham­pi­on in sup­port­ing the growth of Gov­er­nors Island as a Cen­ter for Cli­mate Solu­tions. Her pres­ence under­scored the impor­tance of col­lab­o­ra­tive efforts in address­ing cli­mate chal­lenges and high­light­ed the city’s com­mit­ment to fos­ter­ing an inclu­sive and trans­for­ma­tive green economy.

The excite­ment from the Demo Day Pre­view car­ried over into the week­end with a fam­i­ly-friend­ly Cli­mate Pilot­ing Sum­mer Kick­off held on City of Water Day, July 13, 2024. The even­t’s cen­ter­piece fea­tured ground­break­ing projects from the win­ners of the Water Abun­dance Chal­lenge, the Trust’s first-ever themed chal­lenge, aim­ing to answer how water can help to pow­er cli­mate solu­tions that grow blue and green jobs and cre­ate health­i­er com­mu­ni­ties. Through­out City of Water Day, vis­i­tors had the oppor­tu­ni­ty to inter­act with these inno­v­a­tive projects and the pas­sion­ate indi­vid­u­als behind them. 

Isabelle Stin­nette, Restora­tion Man­ag­er for the New York-New Jer­sey Har­bor and Estu­ary Pro­gram at the Hud­son Riv­er Foun­da­tion, one of the orga­niz­ing bod­ies behind City of Water Day, expressed her admi­ra­tion for the event, stat­ing, I think it’s real­ly nice that this is a hotbed of inno­va­tion, espe­cial­ly cli­mate-focused inno­va­tion. There’s a safe space for these small com­pa­nies and non­prof­its to pilot their projects, share with the com­mu­ni­ty, and get input and help.” 

The fol­low­ing sec­tions detail spe­cif­ic projects that cap­ti­vat­ed atten­dees and show­cased the poten­tial for sus­tain­able urban development.

Air Qual­i­ty Mon­i­tor­ing with South Bronx Unite

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Leslie Vasquez of South Bronx Unite passionately engaging with the public about their air quality monitoring project designed to identify pollution sources and advocate for cleaner air. Photo by Sean Jamar.

South Bronx Unite show­cased an air qual­i­ty mon­i­tor­ing ini­tia­tive aimed at iden­ti­fy­ing pol­lu­tion sources and their health impacts in the South Bronx. 

Air qual­i­ty mon­i­tor­ing is not some­thing that every­body is famil­iar with,” said Leslie Vasquez, Clean Air Pro­gram Orga­niz­er. We need to advo­cate for pol­i­cy changes based on our data.” This project uti­lizes autonomous, solar-pow­ered mon­i­tors to pro­vide real-time data, help­ing to push for clean­er air and bet­ter health resources in dis­ad­van­taged com­mu­ni­ties. By involv­ing the com­mu­ni­ty in mon­i­tor­ing efforts, South Bronx Unite aims to raise aware­ness and dri­ve pol­i­cy changes that can sig­nif­i­cant­ly improve air qual­i­ty and pub­lic health outcomes.

Find South Bronx Unite’s air qual­i­ty mon­i­tor at the base of Out­look Hill.

Duro UAS: Real-Time Water Qual­i­ty Data

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Brian Wilson, CEO of Duro UAS, describing his sonde deployed around the Island’s water and equipped with innovative IoT water quality sensors that provide real-time data to protect our waterways. Photo by Sean Jamar.

Duro UAS, show­cased their Inter­net of Things (IoT) water qual­i­ty mon­i­tor­ing devices, which pro­vide real-time data to track water conditions. 

Engag­ing the pub­lic and show­ing them the amaz­ing cli­mate tech projects hap­pen­ing here is essen­tial,” empha­sized Bri­an Wil­son, Co-Founder and CEO. Duro UAS’s dig­i­tal sen­sors offer a prac­ti­cal solu­tion for mon­i­tor­ing water qual­i­ty, mak­ing it eas­i­er to man­age and improve water resources. Their tech­nol­o­gy not only helps in detect­ing pol­lu­tants but also in under­stand­ing broad­er envi­ron­men­tal trends, there­by enabling more informed deci­sion-mak­ing for water man­age­ment and con­ser­va­tion efforts.

Check out Duro UAS’s son­des in the waters off of Yan­kee Pier and Sois­sons Landing.

LAERO: Trans­form­ing Grey­wa­ter Treatment

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Noemi Florea from Laero engaging attendees with Cycleau's compact greywater treatment system, a decentralized system that empowers building owners and residents with a solution to urban wastewater management. Photo by Sean Jamar.

LAERO intro­duced Cycleau, a com­pact grey­wa­ter treat­ment sys­tem that can be installed under sinks, show­ers, and laun­dry units. 

By treat­ing grey­wa­ter where it’s gen­er­at­ed, we can reduce the num­ber of pol­lu­tants enter­ing our water­ways,” high­light­ed founder Noe­mi Flo­rea. This inno­v­a­tive sys­tem has the poten­tial to sig­nif­i­cant­ly decrease urban waste­water pol­lu­tion, pro­vid­ing a sus­tain­able solu­tion for res­i­den­tial and com­mer­cial use. LAERO’s approach to onsite water treat­ment rep­re­sents a shift towards decen­tral­ized water man­age­ment, which can alle­vi­ate the bur­den on munic­i­pal treat­ment facil­i­ties and con­tribute to health­i­er urban water­ways. The prod­uct oper­ates as a stand­alone piece of equip­ment and can also inte­grate into a household’s exist­ing sup­ply lines and drain­pipes, equip­ping res­i­dents and com­mu­ni­ties with an afford­able and scal­able option to improve their own water infrastructure.

Dis­cov­er the Cycleau device in action at the Parade Ground water sta­tion and inside the ADA bath­room at Yan­kee Pier.

Eco­log­i­cal Inno­va­tion by Object Territories

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Object Territories showcasing their visionary project to create sustainable microhabitats along urban shorelines. Photo by Sean Jamar.

Object Ter­ri­to­ries pre­sent­ed their project focused on cre­at­ing urban habi­tats along shorelines. 

Our goal is to fos­ter eco­log­i­cal stew­ard­ship and cre­ate sus­tain­able urban envi­ron­ments,” stat­ed Mar­cus Carter, Part­ner at Object Ter­ri­to­ries. Mar­cus is also an Assis­tant Pro­fes­sor at Rens­se­laer Poly­tech­nic Insti­tute, where his stu­dents work along­side experts to design and imple­ment urban micro­hab­i­tats along shore­lines. This hands-on involve­ment pro­vides them with prac­ti­cal expe­ri­ence in sus­tain­able urban plan­ning, prepar­ing them to con­tribute to future urban resilience initiatives. 

Their designs allow vis­i­tors to inter­act with and under­stand the impor­tance of urban eco­log­i­cal sys­tems, pro­mot­ing a deep­er con­nec­tion to nature with­in the city and were designed in col­lab­o­ra­tion with the Cen­ter for Archi­tec­ture, Sci­ence, and Ecol­o­gy (CASE) at Rens­se­laer Poly­tech­nic Insti­tute, after­NA­TURE, and Fort Miller Group. The Object Ter­ri­to­ries team aims to enhance bio­di­ver­si­ty and resilience in urban areas, mak­ing cities more liv­able and envi­ron­men­tal­ly friend­ly by inte­grat­ing green spaces and nat­ur­al habi­tats into urban planning.

Find Object Ter­ri­to­ries’ instal­la­tions along the shore­lines near Yan­kee Pier lat­er this year.

RETI Cen­ter: Water­front Resilience

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RETI Center inspiring visitors with their floating gardens, aiming to transform urban waterfronts into resilient ecosystems. Photo by Sean Jamar.

RETI Cen­ter dis­cussed their ini­tia­tives relat­ed to coastal activ­i­ties like kelp har­vest­ing and their float­ing Blue­Blocks Gardens. 

RETI Cen­ter pro­vides train­ing pro­grams for peo­ple involved in coastal activ­i­ties and work­force devel­op­ment for a more sus­tain­able city and urban envi­ron­ments,” explained project team mem­ber Greg Pucil­lo. I’m excit­ed to see the launch out into the water and also to engage with oth­er groups on Gov­er­nors Island who are pilot­ing new projects to envi­sion a future for New York City’s water­front. Our goal is to fos­ter a broad­er con­ver­sa­tion about sus­tain­abil­i­ty in con­nec­tion with the water.” 

New York City youth are active­ly involved in RETI Center’s projects. They par­tic­i­pate in hands-on learn­ing expe­ri­ences, help­ing to build and main­tain the Blue­Blocks Gar­dens and kelp har­vest­ing sys­tems. This engage­ment not only pro­vides valu­able work­force train­ing but also instills a deep­er under­stand­ing of sus­tain­able prac­tices and the impor­tance of eco­log­i­cal stewardship​. The Blue­Blocks Gar­dens allow marine habi­tat to thrive both in and above the water, sup­port­ing wildlife and build­ing a liv­ing shore­line. When deployed in large instal­la­tions, they are envi­sioned to absorb and slow down wave action in low-lying water­front communities. 

Find RETI Center’s Blue­Blocks Gar­dens float­ing off Yan­kee Pier.

GrowNYC: Hydro­pon­ics for Urban Agriculture

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The GrowNYC team highlighting the future of urban agriculture through hydroponic farming in a self-sustaining container farm. Photo by Sean Jamar.

GrowNYC high­light­ed the ben­e­fits of hydro­pon­ic farm­ing with their con­tain­er farm locat­ed on Gov­er­nors Island — a joint effort between the orga­ni­za­tion, Con Edi­son, the Elec­tric Pow­er Research Insti­tute (EPRI), and the Trust for Gov­er­nors Island.

Hydro­pon­ics can mit­i­gate many chal­lenges faced by tra­di­tion­al agri­cul­ture, espe­cial­ly in a chang­ing cli­mate,” observed Bar­ry Roth­stein, Con­tain­er Farm Coor­di­na­tor. GrowNYC’s sys­tem uses sig­nif­i­cant­ly less water and space, mak­ing it a viable option for urban food pro­duc­tion and con­tribut­ing to food secu­ri­ty and sus­tain­abil­i­ty. This approach not only con­serves water resources but also pro­vides a scal­able mod­el for urban agri­cul­ture, which can be adopt­ed by com­mu­ni­ties to improve local food sys­tems and reduce their envi­ron­men­tal footprint. 

GrowNYC’s con­tain­er farm is locat­ed on the Parade Ground behind the Colonels Row houses.

Sea­weed City: Urban Sea­weed Farming

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Luke Eddins (left) and Shanjana Mahmud (center) of Seaweed City exploring the environmental benefits of urban seaweed farming for water quality improvement. Photo by Sean Jamar.

Sea­weed City explores the poten­tial of urban sea­weed farm­ing for envi­ron­men­tal remediation. 

Sea­weed farm­ing can help clean our water­ways and cre­ate marine habi­tats,” explained co-founder Luke Eddins. Their project aims to use sea­weed to extract excess nutri­ents from the water, com­bat ocean acid­i­fi­ca­tion, and pro­vide raw mate­ri­als for sus­tain­able products. 

I’m excit­ed because my nephews are here, and I’m real­ly excit­ed to share some water activ­i­ty with them and see how much I love plants,” added co-founder Shan­jana Mah­mud. Grow­ing sea­weed through urban aqua­cul­ture cre­ates a small­er car­bon foot­print than land-based agri­cul­ture and presents an oppor­tu­ni­ty to engage New York­ers in farm­ing meth­ods for a sus­tain­able future. Through that, Sea­weed City hopes to pro­mote an eco­log­i­cal­ly, eco­nom­i­cal­ly, and cul­tur­al­ly pro­duc­tive shore­line. Sea­weed City’s pilot­ing project is fis­cal­ly spon­sored by New­town Creek Alliance.

Check out Sea­weed City’s Urban Sea­weed Nurs­ery in the waters off Yan­kee Pier lat­er this year.

Just EcoC­i­ties & Bio­hab­i­tats: Tidal Planters

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Jamie Ong and Kevin Dahms presenting their tidal planters that act as miniature onshore wetlands to filter water and support urban biodiversity.

Just EcoC­i­ties and Bio­hab­i­tats intro­duced their tidal planter project, a col­lab­o­ra­tion aimed at improv­ing water qual­i­ty and expand­ing wet­land habi­tats. We’re pilot­ing this project to address com­bined sew­er over­flows and enhance urban bio­di­ver­si­ty,” men­tioned Jamie Ong, Founder of Just EcoCities. 

It’s been real­ly excit­ing today to talk to dif­fer­ent peo­ple and see who knows about com­bined sew­er over­flows, who doesn’t, and then get input on what they think are rea­son­able solu­tions,” added Kevin Dahms, Water Resources Engi­neer at Biohabitats. 

Their tidal planters act as mini-wet­lands, fil­ter­ing water and pro­vid­ing habi­tat for wildlife. This tech­nol­o­gy pro­vides a mod­el for expand­ing marsh habi­tat through­out urban water­fronts with lim­it­ed space on land or with no nat­ur­al shore­lines. The project exem­pli­fies how design inno­va­tion and com­mu­ni­ty involve­ment can work togeth­er to estab­lish marsh habi­tat through­out urban water­fronts, clean up pol­lut­ed water, and increase con­nec­tion with local waterways.

Find Just EcoC­i­ties & Bio­hab­i­tats’ tidal planters near the water­front at Yan­kee Pier lat­er this year.

Vycarb

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Vycarb leading a workshop with the Urban Assembly New York Harbor School. Photo courtesy of Vycarb.

Brook­lyn-based start­up Vycarb has devel­oped a new sys­tem for mea­sur­ing and remov­ing green­house gas car­bon diox­ide (CO2) in water. CO2 is increas­ing in the atmos­phere, warm­ing the plan­et, and in the ocean, where it harms ocean life. In the East Riv­er, CO2 is excep­tion­al­ly high because of pol­lu­tion, con­tribut­ing to glob­al warm­ing and acid­i­fy­ing the water. Through car­bon cap­ture, cli­mate change impacts can be mit­i­gat­ed in water. With its first of its kind tech­nol­o­gy for cap­tur­ing and mea­sur­ing CO2 in water, Vycarb is able to reverse ocean acid­i­fi­ca­tion and remove cli­mate-warm­ing CO2 in the waters just off this pier. Vycar­b’s mod­u­lar, scal­able mod­el opens up oppor­tu­ni­ties for all com­mu­ni­ties to inte­grate car­bon cap­ture tech­nolo­gies into urban envi­ron­ments to achieve envi­ron­men­tal and eco­nom­ic benefits. 

Vycar­b’s drop-in water treat­ment sys­tem can be seen at Pier 102.

By bring­ing togeth­er diverse solu­tions and fos­ter­ing pub­lic engage­ment, the cli­mate pilot­ing projects on Gov­er­nors Island demon­strate one impor­tant step towards a sus­tain­able future by wel­com­ing all vis­i­tors to meet a diverse cohort of cli­mate inno­va­tors and to learn about cli­mate solu­tions in devel­op­ment today. The Trust for Gov­er­nors Island’s com­mit­ment to sup­port­ing such inno­v­a­tive projects under­scores the poten­tial for cities to become hubs of envi­ron­men­tal solu­tions and resilience. As these ini­tia­tives con­tin­ue to evolve, they hold the promise of mak­ing sig­nif­i­cant con­tri­bu­tions to urban sus­tain­abil­i­ty and cli­mate resilience, set­ting an inspir­ing exam­ple for oth­er cities around the world. The Trust is grate­ful to the sup­port­ers of Gov­er­nors Island’s cli­mate pro­grams, includ­ing ConEdi­son, Ama­zon, New York Com­mu­ni­ty Trust, the Don­ald A. Pels Char­i­ta­ble Trust, Deutsche Bank, and LISC.

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